Three Alberta girls killed while playing in canola truck identified

WITHROW, Alta. — Three sisters killed in a farm accident in west-central Alberta have been identified.

Catie Bott, who was 13, and her 11-year-old twin sisters Jana and Dara were buried while playing on a truck full of canola on Tuesday night.

The accident happened on a family farm near Withrow, about 200 kilometres north of Calgary.

RCMP say adults were able to pull the girls from the truck and perform CPR, but two of them couldn’t be revived. The third girl was flown by air ambulance to a children’s hospital in Edmonton but died overnight.

In a statement read by the RCMP, the parents said the girls grew up on a farm and they don’t regret introducing their daughters to a farm lifestyle.

“Our kids died living life on the farm,” the family said. “It is a family farm. We do not regret raising and involving our kids … on our farm. It was our life.

“Thank you for all of the overwhelming support that we have received from all of the first responders, neighbours and friends. We would ask the media to respect our privacy at this time of grief.”

Exactly what happened is still under investigation.

Emergency crews initially said the girls were in the truck while it was being loaded, but the RCMP said they were playing on the truck when they became buried.

Sgt. Mike Numan, who became emotional while reading the statement from the family, would not answer any questions.

“This is hitting all of us very hard,” Numan said. “Frontline responders are routinely called out to sad situations, but things are always harder for everyone when kids are involved.”

Pastor Brian Allan of the Withrow Gospel Mission said people in the tiny community quickly went to the farm to help the parents and their son.

“They are obviously devastated,” Allan said Wednesday. “There is just a deep sense of loss and sadness.”

Allan said the parents and children have been strong members of the church and have lived in the area for years.

“We are going to be spending time with them. I know that there are guys down there working around the farm right now, cleaning things up and just trying to get things back to some sense to normal,” he said.

“We feel the impact of this loss in a substantial way.”

Farm safety expert Marcel Haucault, who is the Executive Director of the Canadian Agriculture Safety Association, spoke with News Talk Radio’s John Gormley and says these tragedies are becoming all too common.

“Including these three young girls dying, there have been seven deaths since January related to grain entrapments,” said Haucault. “It’s number 10 or 11 as to why somebody dies on the farm. These types of deaths seem to be on the rise and it’s concerning to us.”

Haucault, a former farmer himself who had a near miss similar to what the Bott family experienced, says farmers struggle with wanting to impart the love of agriculture to their children.

“Because we’ve been exposed to that activity we don’t see the hazards or the dangers,” said Haucault. “And I think that’s what happened here. We think of ‘ it’s fun to play in the grain’ but we forget with the newer equipment it’s not a game. It’s a hazardous work place.”

Neighbours plan to finish the harvest for the family.

— With files from reporters John Cotter and Chris Purdy in Edmonton. Justin Blackwell